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tv   Huckabee  FOX News  September 28, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT

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. can get the real answers you need. start building your confident retirement today. thanks for watching, huckabee starts right now. >> a woman is beheaded in oklahoma. is it work place violence? or is it jihad? >> and young voters about to are young voters about to sway the midterm election? plus my tearful farewell to eric holder. all that and more tonight on huckabee. good evening, everything, i'm mike huckabee, and thank you for joining us. i got plenty to say about the horrible beheading in oklahoma. i'll be getting to that in just a moment. because a lot has happened this week. president obama ordered air strikes against isis in syria,
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which was condemned by vlad mere putin, because he thought he ought to respect the sovereign borders of syria, and if anyone knows something about respecting someone's borders, it's vladimir putin. meanwhile the president took his road show to the united nations this weeks to show how the jihadist terrorists aren't religious. gee, they didn't seem to know that, since a killings are done in the name of their religion. but the president did apologize for america and he made sure to remind every one of the riots in ferguson, missouri, which best i can tell had nothing to do with the u.n., isis, terrorism, ebola, or anything america ought to feel guilty about. i share no more blame for the events in ferguson as i do for the tauchbs of trash that were left on the streets of manhattan in that big crowd that marched for the environment and climate change. i just wonder if the trash they left was all biodegradable and
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could be put into a compost. speaking of threats, an iraqi war veteran suffering from ptsd jumped over the fence at the white house and made it through the unlocked front door before finally being stopped by which the secret service. amazingly, the secret service tried to spin the complete break down of what's supposed to be the most secure residence in the world by congratulating themselves by showing such restraint in not turning loose the dogs or stopping the intruder with a bullet. it's a good thing the intruder showeds restraint and didn't show up wearing a bomb or carrying a vile of anthrax, perhaps the intruder had heard that we weren't guarding our boarders anymore and jumping fences and he thought that meant the white house as well. also some great news, eric the withholder has designed as attorney general and the head of the injustice department. holder has been masterful at withholding information from congress, you know, most people
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step down and announce they want to spend more time with their family. holder probably wants to devote more time to investigate into bullying of the conservative groups by the irs, as well as the magical disappearance of lois learner e-mails or maybe he wants to go after the people who killed brian terry with a gun that was supplied by our own government to mexican drug gangs. or maybe he'll finally punish someone for illegally digging into e-mails from the associated press or fox news's james rosen. and no doubt, he wants to finally bring to justice the black panthers to waved baseball bats in philadelphia in order to sue press voters. forgive me if i won't shed crocodile tears over holder's resignation. let me be very clear, his race has nothing to do with it. it's just about his letting the justice department run rough shod over the constitutional rights of americans who were foolish enough to think that their government was going to
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protect them instead of spy on their e-mails and phone calls. silly me. oh, well, he's gone, and hopefully the political games played will also go with him. and that was our week. the suspect in the beheading of a former co-worker in oklahoma had celebrated terrorists on facebook where he posted pictures of slaosama bin laden and taliban fighters and even reminded us that sharia law was coming. police say he severed the head of a 54-year-old woman and then stabbed another woman before he was shot by an executive at the foot plant where he recently was fired. the fbi is investigating. garry burnson is a decorated former cia officer who has led several counter terrorism
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developments and he joins me now. gary, great to have you back on the show. let's talk about warning signs, should we have seen something coming with this guy in oklahoma city? >> clearly, someone's posting, you know, beheadings, talking about stoning, doing all these things on a social media website, one would have thought this would have been seen, they would have been reported to the fbi and the fbi would have reported this to local police. but i haven't heard anything stated that anyone acted pre-emptively on any of these warnings. >> help me out here, because the nsa is collecting enormous ablts of meta data on all of us. if they've got a haystack that big and know who i talked to last thursday when i ordered pizza and what i wanted on it. i'm having a hard time understanding, how they don't catch stuff like this or the
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tsarnaev brothers who are posting stuff. what tease use of all this technology if we haven't going to use it to catch the bad guys. >> they're targeting people's communication, but they're not looking at social media. there are companies that do target social media and have passed these things to the government on their own because they're local u.s. citizens. the government needs to look at social media, in the sense that, and this is not like rummaging through people's back closets, but if someone is posting things where there is murder, mayhem, torture, beheadings, stonings, these people need to be identified and passed to local law enforcement. >> i watch elderly women in wheelchairs having to be frisked at the tsa checkpoint so they can get on an airplane. i don't think we have had anybody do terrorist acts who's 78 years old and in a wheelchair. but it seems like we should be focusing all this money and all
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of this attention on people we are most likely to have a terrorist act from. >> there have been efforts by the fbi to look at those mosques and those imams to look at those organizations that are radicals, but they do need to go beyond that and the social media space where is they have been failing clearly. >> we know that this guy's facebook page contained an enormous number of really threatening statements that he made, photos of the twin towers burning and the statue of liberty burning. but this one thing out of oklahoma city, a place likes moore, oklahoma. do americans need to worry that somebody related to isis has already slipped across our border and is roaming around among us right now? >> unfortunately, the answer is yes. isis has been around a while, other groups like al qaeda who's
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been called the khorasan group at this point, they have people with foreign passports, american passports, european passports, and many of those european pass ports, those countries have the visa waiver program. they can appear in the united states without appearing before a foreign embassy for deep scrutiny. if children can walk across that border unmolested, so can these terrorists. also, when you look at isis, they can actually second 17-year-olds across that border, that could turn themselves in as the children in central america do and we could be placing them in homes around the country. we got to close that border. >> so we're actually providing three meals a day, perhaps a cot and getting them enrolled in school and the whole time they're just a sleeper cell and they're going to blow us us up. >> 40% of the isis fighters are 16 to 18 years old. and under the current system under which we're monitoring that southern border, they could
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be told come back in three months for a court appointment. >> we need to have serious reform and we need to close that boarder, very, very quickly, we need to reexamine the visa waiver program because hundreds if not 1,000 individuals on european passports could enter the united states unzer the visa waiver program. so we have got to be looking at that hard and everybody in the united states needs to recognize, we are at war, sadly, not a war of our choice, isis has declared war on us. if you see something say something we all need to realize we're in this together. >> if somebody comes across a facebook page full of jihadist threats it might be a good idea to pass it on to the fbi. that is and furious, the irs scan dpal, just a couple of the controversies that eric holder's -- how is history going
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excedrin migraine works. >> eric holder is one of the most controversial and polarizing figures in the obama administration and stepping down from his post of attorney i reck holder is stepping down from his post as attorney general i i spoke with former department of justice attorney jay christian adams who formed the human rights section of the doj. and juan williams. >> he worked with both democrats and republicans in the justice department was there a marked difference in the way this particular administration managed the d oj? >> absolutely, it was between night and day. during the bush years when we enforced civil rights laws, that was the starting point.
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you looked at what the law said and you brought cases based on the four corners of the law. inder the obama administration after the inaugust ration, the law became a suggestion, it was sort of, the law says it's a whirly after this, and you see this over and over with voter id litigation, using the voting rights election, not using -- this is an administration that selectively enforces the law, downtown apply the law properly and useds the law as a political weapon. >> juan, do you u think christian is being a bit unfair, uncharitable to the attorney general? >> with a name like christian, uncharitable wouldn't be the right phrase, but i would say he's being highly political in his analysis, and i will be just as political since we're in a conversation here, governor, is to say this administration, eric holder under barack obama actually improved the quality of the justice department. and let me start by saying,
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remember, that under the bush m, we had the whole issue of firing of attorneys general around the country, we also had the torture memo controversy and at the civil rights division, christian says the law was taken as more of a suggestion than as the letter of the law. and again, let me say i think that this is not the case, that what you have here is a situation where, again, enforcing the law and all of us, all americans have a constitutional right to vote, and i think every american should want to make sure that that is the case, that that riling is protected and that you don't have a politicalization which republicans say, oh, gee, you know, these young people, these old people, these minorities, they tend to vote democratic so we're going to try to put in place laws that would disenfranchise them. >> don't americans also have a right to know that their tax returns are going to be kept confidential and the irs who demands of me, showing up with
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receipts and hanging on to them for seven years that they could at least hold on to their own continue for sep years? >> not only has the justice department investigated, fbi which reports to justice, but again, to suggest that this has. been a thorough investigation would be to impugn the integrity, not just of an eric holder, and i know that wright can't stand eric holder, he's a bad guy, but it's also to impugn the integrity of the two men who have run fbi under his tenure and to it's impugn the integrity of every fbi agent in this town, it's just not fair. >> what was the agenda? why didn't we get a full scale investigation that was made public? if there's nothing to hide, quit taking the fifth amendment, lois learner, come out and say what you got, and don't tell us that you haven't done anything wrong. >> there's a culture of lawlessness in this justice department. right now there are people close to the inspector general who
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committed perjury still working in the voting section. there are pollsters -- who got a buyout of the justice department. there is a culture of lawlessness and tolerance for wrong doing. who has ever been held accountable? nobody, there's never been anybody held accountable there. >> there is always this specter of race that hangs over the justice department because of some of the comments that eric holder has made, staying that he felt like, you know, that he was treated differently because of his race. i always want to be very sensitive, he grew up in the south, i saw jim crowe, it was horrible ux i reputated everything that every happened in that era. but i guess i'm having a hard time believing that everyone that happens, it's a race issue. >> let me tell you, i think there is a legitimate way to criticize eric holder that has nothing to do with race, holder, however, i think in some cases, governor was used as a
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substitute, if you will, by people who don't like president obama. i think it's more he's scene as obama's guy and he didn't like obama. >> didn't like obama or obama's policy. i don't have any problems with about obama, but i got a lot of problems with his policies. >> i think there's legitimate ways to go about this criticism, but i think it's legitimate political criticism. but there are people especially on the far right, you go back to the whole argument of is he muslim. is health care going to leede us to damnation? that's a bit much. and it leads people, especially black people to bhaily sensitive. why is there stuff harsh criticism directed at this president and this attorney general. >> was there harsh criticism i seem to remember against george bush and john ashcroft, maybe i'm missing something there. >> there is a reason why eric holder is the least popular member of the administration. about 20% approval, and it has
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absolutely nothing to do with race, it has to do with his policies. if anything it has to do with race, he's pushing race in the face of americans, he's calling them racial cowards, he's the one that's using race, as juan said to deflect criticism, but also to energize a political base. he's constantly using race, whether it's in ferguson, whether it's in a texas courtroom challenging voter id wherever it is, he uses race to mobilize the base. >> i think you have a situation in this country where race is a major issue, sercertainly a the republican party has become overwhelmingly white during this period and i think there's an effort on the democrats to hold that minority base so race is definitely an issue. but i must tell you that when holder comes in and deals with the new black panther party, and standing at the door and says well, you know, these are two
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guys that are only going to go to far, there was a response from the republican party, to say you're playing racial politics, eric holder, because if those were two white guys, all hell would have broken loose. >> and they were standing there with baseball bats. >> that raises into a little different level when you're holding a baseball bat. >> and there was a prosecution, things did go forward. >> that's a slap on the wrist. >> there we go. i hope you're going to join me and concerned women for america on sunday october 5 from 2:00 to 4:00 at the u.s. capital in washington for a rally for israel. i'll be speaking an it's also going to be an opportunity for all of us to say to the world, that we support our ally israel. i hope you'll join us sunday october 5 in washington. if you would like to attend the rally, go to rally for israel.com. ben is going to explain why
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my next guest said millennials are not liking what they are hearing from republicans and if the gop wants to start winning more elections, my next guest says that the mill less than yals are not liking what they're hearing from washington. there is a very larges voting bloc among millenials, people 18 to 30 years old, what3]1 motiva them to vote? >> by have to confess when it comes to motivating millenials, that's something everybody's trying to figure out. it hasn't really formed a
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coherent view of american politics, it's in part because of the -- so much promise and so much failure to deliver on that promise. but i think also, what you see in motivating people to vote is a general perception that the game is rigged, that large powerful institutions have a voice in washington and that individuals really are atomized, that you don't have the ability to get their voices heard. >> maybe they think that because they're right. let's be honest with them. i think that's one of the things that frustrates all of us up and down the demographics. we have got a couple of charts. this will help illustrate what you're talking about. this shows the millenials, 51% of them are voters, which means a big chunk of them haven't even decided to register. and less than half voted in 2012 in a presidential election,
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that's a pretty low number. >> you can see the kind of disappointment they are experiencing. over the course of the past two decades, they have been disappointed by both parties, they have been disappointed by what they have seen from washington. this is a critical juncture for the large jest generation in american history. and they're really trying to figure out where they are. >> let's look at the baby boomers, because that is the second largest population bloc and of the baby boomers, we'll put that on the screen. 76% of them are registered. 68 percent of them voted. so even though they're more than 20 million fewer in number, they're going to be voting at higher peace taj. >> but i also think that millenials are up for grabs that maybe the baby boomers aren't.
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what we have seen from millenials are a delayed sbrangs into society. it's delayed them forming families and forming house homeland security, moving out of their parents houses, forming fall membership in a community where they care about the local school and the local government. that really hasn't happened to the degree we have seen in prior generations and it's one of the reasons they haven't jumped into the political fray as much as you would expect. >> we're going to continue the conversation with a panel of college students and ask if they like what they're hearing from the gop. that's next. alka-seltzer plus night rushes relief to eight symptoms of a full blown cold including your stuffy nose. (breath of relief) oh, what a relief it is. thanks. anytime.
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to help all those wishes come true. cvs health. because health is everything. live from america's news headquarters, i'm harris faulkner. a key u.s. ally in the war on terror in the middle east rocked by turmoil.
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deand urging state security forces to come back. the country has been in chaos since last week when the rebels backed by iran seized see government buildings. meanwhile a splinter group of al qaeda is claiming responsibility for firing a rocket fire the iranian embassy. pennsylvania police now focusing a little bit more to the southeast in the pocono mountains, although they're not saying exactly why. but the very wooded area remains the same. freen accused of shooting two officers with a high powered rifle. let's get back to huckabee, all the headlines when you want them, fox news.com. they're talking about how millenials feel about the current state of the republican party. joining us is three college students of the republican party.
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jillian any is a senior at morris college and polly bowen is a senior at my alma mater. i say go tigers, i can even pronounce washington. great to have you and all of these guys here. and ben, and again, great to have you with us. we were talking about last segment about what millenials actually want. what motivates them to go. chi you've been on the show before, let me start with you, you're an old pro at this. what motivates you to go vote for somebody or to go vote against somebody? >> on election day, what motivates me is someone who understands the proper role of government in a free society and to me, that's someone who understands government, that government is -- and someone who understands the economy. >> see, i would agree whole heartedly is the best government is the most limited and the most local, closest to the people and
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that's the way the constitution was written. joanne, you are self proclaimed libertarian. what does that mean? libertarians are definitely for limited government. we differ from traditional republicans on a lot of issues, but i think now candidates like rand paul are getting millenials interest in government and the institutions. they just felt that he matched their principles better than -- >> and what are those spring approximatelies? >> you know, limited government, free market, bhafl just stay out of my business, a lot of libertarians right now are into like seeing an end to drug prohibition, just tighter regulations on government institutions, such as that they don't have to interfere so much in your daily life. and a reduction of bureaucracy. >> when i hear sometimes
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libertarians talk, its sounds like a lot of the liberals in the 60s and 70s, just leave us alone, a lot of free speech, no drug prosecution, what makes libertarians different from the classic liberals of the baby boomer age who were in college in the '60s and 70s? >> i think one of the things we see right now is, we see more and more agreement between a younger set of libertarians and i would say constitutional conservatives who are frustrated with the fact that both parties have essentially become croniest institutions who really only listen to big and powerful forces within society and really are not interested in devofling power back to individuals, libertarian thought that's really responsible really looks a lot more like federalism and localism. it's about deinvolving power back to communities that govern themselves. and those are neighborhoods that are in the sense that we have
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learned over time, they actually can govern themselves better than these far off washington institutions and it's one that libertarians are making more forcefully now than a lot of republicans in washington. >> what you just said, i certainly agree with whole heartedly. get the power out of washington, move it back to the states, that's where the constitution put it. molly from your perspective, what attracts you to a political candidate or to a cause? what ask it that makes you interested in do you consider yourself a libertarian, a republican, what? >> we definitely like to see consistency, i want someone who's going to back up what they say. i think most of the millenials get frustrated. >> what makes you mad, what makes you want to go vote against somebody? >> if you don't take those stands, then i'm not going to vote for you. i think that's more critical than the economy, i think that's more critical than other issues,
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just make sure that you protect those rights and those lives of the innocent. >> there's some disagreement maybe the more, i would say hard line libertarians and the most traditional republicans particularly on social issues, things like the stang it theity of human life, why is that not important to a lot of libertarians. >> libertarians are all over the board with that. i would say the bulk of them, at least in my experience have been pro gay marriage or maybe they want to take it a step further and say government shouldn't be involved in marriage all together. one of the main attracting factors to libertarianism is the fact that most young people are socially liberal but they want to see a pull back in faxes and the size of government. >> as a contest that has libertarian tendencies, i am very much pro life. i understand that life begins at
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conception and it's imperative to protect life. and libertarians tent to believe in natural rights and you can't start protecting natural rights if you're not protecting the right and the life of the innocent and the most vulnerable. >> there's not an easy way to define millenials. all great to have you here. thank you very, very much. well, let me just say we're going to continue this conversation, for more, go to fox news.com/huckabee to hear more of it. according to a new poll, support for obama care is declining in california of all places. with a majority of the state's residents having an unfavorable view of the law, but one doctor out there has a view on obama care tha to hear and you will when we come back.
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we close on the house tomorrow. i want one of these opened up. because tomorow we go live... it's a day full of promise. and often, that day arrives by train. big day today? even bigger one tomorrow. when csx trains move forward, so does the rest of the economy. csx. how tomorrow moves. test test flush we're coming up to the one-year anniversary of the launch of the obama care website. now a year ago, our correspondent ryan reese tried to sign up through the website. with not much luck. a year later, we're going to check and find out, has he made any progress. so let's check in with him now. >> whew, man, it's been a year, but it looks like i'm just a few
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questions away from being signed up for obama care. >> if you speak multiple languages. >> multiple languages? why buzz that matter? >> would you be lg to take in a family of illegal immigrants in exchange for health care? >> i can't go that. >> if we give you health care, will you stop asking about benghazi. >> all right, fine, anything. >> do you like to travel. >> yeah, i like to travel. >> congratulations, you have been selected to serve as a medical technician in the war on ebola. >> what? ebola, i don't want to contract ebo ebola. >> come on, come on. pick up, come on. what is more important than me not getting i bowl la? what could they possibly be doing?
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and now you know. well, an orthopedic surgeon served as a team physician for the u.s. national soccer team. he also serves as an advise for the u.s. olympic team. he stopped by earlier. we are now one year into obama care. as a doctor, are you satisfied with this first year of the launch of obama care? >> no. first off, i'm a sports doctor and it's not good enough for us to have a problem and just give get people back to routine activities. you have to push to the highest level. i think we have got to invest a little bit more energy to get exactly what we want in health care today. >> obama care really was not, at least in my estimation, a health care proposal, it was an insurance proposal. explain why it was inadequate
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because it only addressed insuring people and it seemed to cost more and for some people provide less. >> the focus on the insurance purpose is really a distraction for all of us. i really believe that we have to focus on mission, vision and plan. we have to have a patient centered approach to it empowering all americans and all patients to be the best they can be. look, almost a trillion dollars spent on hypertension, obesity, heart disease, diabetes and all we have to do is take a run in central park, or take a walk, a hike, do yoga, your choice, a trillion dollars we can make a difference. >> most of our health care system is based on intervention rather than prevention before they ever get to that point, when i ski numbers, 80% of our health care in this country go to chronic disease, which apart from genetics can pretty much be changed with lifestyle and personal choices. why aren't we talking about
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that? why aren't we focused on that. >> that's a burden as you say and we have to be focused on prevention, we have to be focused on empowering each of us as citizens, to discover what we need, how to access it and how to integrate it in our lives and reduce that burden overall. >> if there's a big message that america needs to focus on and not just health care reform, where does that focus on? >> any time i challenge with these issues of policy and procedure, i close my eyes and i focus and i say what's best for the patient? start with patient ken trick approaches, empowering them and then go to our leaders, we have to have a stake holder consensus, to focus on what the mission, what we're trying to accomplish with who and how, if we can stay on our mission with what this patient centric approach is, will empower us to get to where we need to go. >> do patients care about what
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kind of health care they get? if the third party is paying and the patient really doesn't know what the mri costs, or the cat scan costs, how can they possibly take an active role in trying to contain the utilization of health care? >> they can't. they need to be empowered to understand the process, how to minimize that, how and why they should be involved and control their own care. >> what about health savings accounts where the patient does have a role to play, there's actually a financial inseptemce if they don't spend it, they get to keep it or roll it over. is that an incentive for the patient? >> that is one way, the key at the end of the day is about empowerment, question have to understand, we have to discover, we have to access and we have to integrate it into our lives. >> one of the most frustrating things about the entire process, how few doctors were involved in the kroofting of obama care.
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you would think that something of this magnitude, that was going to touch every person's relationship with his or her doctor would have involve a lot of input from doctors. here's a piece of news from our audience, all of them get a copy of the doctor's book and get to go home with it. or even the coast of california. the new ram 1500 ecodiesel. with 9,200 pounds of towing and 28 highway miles per gallon. west will never end. guts. glory. ram. wgoodnight.ever end. goodnight. for those kept awake by pain
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they're multiplatinum >> they are multi-platinum selling artists they have a brand new album called graph vit. please welcome requestings big and rich. >> great having you guys here. >> ten years. there are a lot of marriages that don't last that long, guys. that's pretty good. a lot of us listened to music
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over the years there's incredible chemistry that goes on between the two of you not only in the performing but the song writing. what makes that magic work? >> don and i that is our time to come together almost like speaking brothers and true friends. when you discuss the writing of a song, you are delving into the story of your lives and the lives around you. we als come -- always come at t from other angles and find the center of a good song it has everybody's songs. >> congress should look it up, actually. if we can do it anybody can. >> we could do worse. in fact we are doing worse, right? >> we are thinking about running for the ticket in 2016. bumper sticker will be go big and get rich in 2016. >> when it comes down to it everybody is just a bunch of crazies somebody has to be brave
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enough to leave the freak parade. >> i hope everybody gets the album called "gravity." this song is called, "look at you." flsh flush ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ >> when we come back, we will be
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we had aot >> we had a lot of comments on my talk about how to keep overseas terrorists from coming back and doing us harm. that's a tough one. one needs to know if they have been radicalized the very nature of our system makes that difficult. luce says revoke their citizenship, don't let them come back, the traitors. carol says what is the confusion, folks. look under the laws regarding treason. he says sadly we will do nothing. don't forget to set your dvr every saturday night at 8:00 p.m. do that so you don't miss a minute of the show. here are other suggestions, invite your friends over for dinner and a show, k when they
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get there splay our show. then serve them bologna. good night and god bless. stay tuned for "justice with judge jeanine. >> welcome to a special live sunday edition of "justice." i am judge jammieanine pirro. a terrorism expert says the terror group khorasan doesn't he goes cy exist and the obama administration made it up to justify the air war which congress didn't give approval. >> obama gives us the khorasan group? the who? you haven't heard of the khorasan group because there isn't one. it is a name the administration came up with calculating

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